This right here, this captures why this board continues to go toxic...b/c of statements like this which fail to acknowledge the problem.CSWendt said:If it was so easy to turn a bad team into a historically good one, then every GM would be doing it. Instead, you see teams sit in the cellar for decades. Lunhow has done a fantastic job building a winner.knoxtom said:If you look at Lunhow's record throughout his Astros tenure, he isn't very good. The team is only good because they were so bad for so long. His hit rate is shockingly low, he was just given a lot of chances to hit.CSWendt said:
Stop complaining for the sake of it. JD Davis was never one of those guys we didn't want to trade. The hang ups were with big prospects like Tucker, Fisher, Whitley. If you're going to whine, at least be intelligent about it.
This isn't early June anymore, we're getting into the middle of August and they're just 2 games over .500 in the last 2+ months. Let's say that being swept by the White Sox is the bottom (I mean, it is, but let's say that was the last straw and fired them up) and they rediscover the same stride for the last 48 games of the season that they had in the first 48. They'll finish 103-59...that will be "historical" by 1-game for the franchise ('98 team won 102)...in terms of MLB history, nobody outside our bubble would remember the '17 Astros in 5 years unless they go all the way.
In other words, this team went from being historically good to just another team that will likely win their division and might hold onto the best record in the league if they can stop pooping their pants; it's time to wake-up and realize that this is no longer trending as a special season and it's not b/c of a bad week or two.
Now, while I don't agree with the fatalism of what the OP here is saying, it's time to acknowledge that Luhnow is at the tipping point for his tenure and there's plenty of fair criticism there.
He has been the GM during two historical seasons, but as we're sitting here today, it's not 2015 or 2017...it's 2012 & 2013 when the team lost 111 & 107 games respectively, marking the two worst seasons in franchise history. That wasn't Luhnow's fault, that was straight Drayton Mclane boobery, the man who brought you Tim Purpura to replace Gerry Hunsicker after he ran Hunsicker off and then refused to let his GM with an obvious eye for talent, sign draft picks and then made him shed salary so that he could squeeze the highest margins out of a sale of the team.
However, Luhnow inherited a system which had Jose Altuve, George Springer, Dallas Keuchel, etc.
Luhnow pulled a great maneuver in his first draft skipping over Buxton/Appel to draft Correa b/c he knew he could sign him below slot which would allow him to have the money to sign the top of the 1st round talent which slipped to the 2nd due to "signability" in Lance McCullers.
Also; and I believe this was on day 1 of his tenure; there was the Rule 5 draft where he executed a trade with the Red Sox for Marwin after they had drafted him from the Cubs.
He got very fortunate that a mistake with the #1 pick in the 2014 draft (Brady Aiken) turned into a supplemental pick for #2 in 2015 and that turned into Bregman. The fact remains, however, that while Aiken and his agent should shoulder the fault for a lot of the shadiness behind his injuries/health...Luhnow and his team should've done more homework. Again, this is a win and just like I'm not going to deny the Texans credit for finding a solution on a mistake with Osweiller b/c they were able to turn the opportunity into Deshaun Watson, I believe Luhnow deserves credit here.
He has been savvy about putting off fan pressure so that the organization gets favorable contract timetables in terms of service time from guys like Springer and Correa.
However, there are plenty of things to be concerned over:
1.) 6 drafts and only a single starting pitcher that has been able to stick with the big club; although I believe Martes will be the 2nd
2.) Released J.D. Martinez at 26, he would go on to be an All Star and win a Silver Slugger award and have a high OPS in every season since...including his 1st season with Detroit which came after he was released during Spring training in 2014
3.) Made Tony Sipp an albatross with a ridiculous contract and he can't cut his losses
4.) Carlos Gomez
5.) While he got Fiers in the same trade, nobody here is thinking "wow, what luck!"...the Brewers, however, ARE saying that. They got a bullpen lefty specialist out of the deal named Josh Hader; looked at his stats here in his rookie season? (22.1 IP and an ERA of 0.81 in 17 appearance) They also got Domingo Santana, at 24, he is a key component in the middle of the lineup for a team that has been a surprise in terms of playoff contention.
6.) Went into 2016 knowing that the offensive hole at 1B really hindered the 2015 Astros...did nothing to address in the offseason and even decided to trade away any everyday infielder in Jed Lowrie (opening a hole at 3B as well in 2016) for a prospect who spent the 1st 50 games this year on suspension for PEDs
7.) Has failed in two straight offseasons to really address the back end of the rotation...Fister last year, then essentially took the same approach with Morton this year. Hopefully Morton doesn't do what Fister did in the last two months of 2016 or else it'll be another really bad looking nail for an MLB exec's career coffin
8.) Has sat on prospects at the deadline the last two seasons when his team really needed to inject some life...yeah, the Gomez trade was terrible and Milwaukee absolutely owned you, but take a damn shot!!! He had no problem dealing off prospects who were thought highly of when he didn't draft them (Jarred Cosart for Marisnick, Mike Foltynewicz for Evan Gattis)
9.) You now have 3 "thumper" AAAA 1st basemen in your system which you made untouchable in trade discussions in previous years which are essentially worthless to you now (Singleton/White/Reed). This is a MAJOR indictment of your system to miss that badly at the same position and actually think you were going to go into a season and have one of those guys be a big RBI guy for a team that was in the playoffs the year before.
There are more examples of both good & bad moves, but acting like the dude has been some flawless genius above reproach is simply not accurate.